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Word: connors (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

Reaction from the Boston School committee to the 140-page report was shift and highly negative. Mrs. Louise Hicks, the chairman, said yesterday that she was "appalled" at the idea students to achieve racial balance. She and her colleague, committeeman William O'Connor, urged a public referendum to resolve the issue...

Author: By Robert J. Samuelson, | Title: Committee Attacks School Segregation | 4/16/1965 | See Source »

Washington is willing to bend, but only a bit. Commerce Secretary John Connor said last week that U.S. businessmen may lend and invest freely in the underdeveloped nations. The U.S. is in no mood to relax its restrictions on the 22 "developed" nations-including all of Europe as well as Japan and Australia-because it is continuing to lose gold. The nation's gold supply dropped another $250 million last week, bringing the year's loss up to $825 million and the stock at Fort Knox down to a 27-year low of $14.6 billion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Money: The Dollar Drought | 3/26/1965 | See Source »

Public Burden. Washington's solution, of course, is the program to induce businessmen to cut back their profitable foreign lending and investing. Last week Commerce Secretary John T. Connor said that he had enough "assurances" from corporate chiefs to persuade him that the program will succeed. While businessmen have gone along with the President's plan, a number of them point out that the payments gap is caused neither by trade, which brought in a $6.7 billion payments surplus last year, nor by private investment, which was nearly offset by profits brought back home. The main burden...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Money: Looking for Change | 3/12/1965 | See Source »

...expectably enough, is an Episcopalian; but all he really believes in is old money and old family (twelve generations), and he observes that faith by celebrating 365 Condescension Days a year. This condescension drips like ungentle rain on anyone beneath-club stewards, upstairs maids, college deans, headwaiters, and Mike Connor, an upstart Irish colleague in his uncle's brokerage house. Then, at age 30, "Lock" suddenly suffers a rupture in his social conscience, a vestigial organ that probably never bothered a Thompson before...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Also Current: Feb. 26, 1965 | 2/26/1965 | See Source »

...first anguished twinge comes one evening when he invites Connor to the top-drawer Shore Club for the perverse I purpose of seeing him bankrupted at backgammon. Instead, Connor winds up $4,000 ahead, the well-born clubmen welsh on their losses, and Thompson begins to question himself. The answers he tries out are, successively, drinking, urinating on the Shore Club walls, and letting himself be cuckolded by, of all people, Connor. The disintegration of Lock Thompson evokes less pity or terror than tedium. Though Author Wetmore has a palate for sour-mash dialogue, he puts into a quart bottle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Also Current: Feb. 26, 1965 | 2/26/1965 | See Source »

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